"Does not the Light Itself call us to this rest when It says, Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest: Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart and ye shall find rest unto your souls. For My yoke is easy, and My burthen is light, For what heavy yoke does He put upon our mind's neck, Who bids us shun every desire that causes disquietude? What heavy burthen does He lay upon His followers, Who warns us to decline the wearisome ways of the world? So let the holy man consider with himself, that by the mystery of the Incarnation 'the Light' rescues the wicked from heavy toil, while It takes clean away all the aims of wickedness from their hearts; let him reflect how every converted person has already here below a taste, by inward tranquility, of that rest which he desires to have throughout eternity, and let him say, There the wicked cease from disturbance, and the weary in strength are at rest."
Gregory the Great, Moralia in Job IV,66.
Musings about the spiritual life and the mission of the Church by an Episcopal parish priest.
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
Saturday, June 25, 2016
Ponder: "those old songs don't sugarcoat anything"
"But Ralph always reserved time in each show for a few of the older songs that he would sing himself. Those were the moments that audience members were most likely to remember afteward. They were a reminder of a time and place where death and backbreaking work were not hidden out of sight, but were a constant presence.
"I don't put nothing on the song," Ralph told me. "I just sing it the way I feel it. I just open my mouth and however it sounds, that's the way it comes out. I try to do it the best I can, but I just try to feel it...Those old songs don't sugarcoat anything. You don't hear that kind of singing much anymore, but when I was growing up, it was mostly what I heard. That sound's not spread out everywhere; it's just here in these mountains."
Geoffrey Himes, "If Mount Rushmore Were in Appalachia, This Face Would Be On It." The Washington Post 25 Jun. 2016, C2.
"I don't put nothing on the song," Ralph told me. "I just sing it the way I feel it. I just open my mouth and however it sounds, that's the way it comes out. I try to do it the best I can, but I just try to feel it...Those old songs don't sugarcoat anything. You don't hear that kind of singing much anymore, but when I was growing up, it was mostly what I heard. That sound's not spread out everywhere; it's just here in these mountains."
Geoffrey Himes, "If Mount Rushmore Were in Appalachia, This Face Would Be On It." The Washington Post 25 Jun. 2016, C2.
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Ponder: "withdraws itself for our good"
"But sometimes, whilst the mind is sustained with the plenitude and richness of a gift so large, if it enjoys uninterrupted security in these things, it forgets from what source it has them, and imagines that it derives from itself, which it sees to be never wanting to it. Hence it is that this same grace sometimes withdraws itself for our good, and shews the presumptuous mind how weak it is in itself. For then we really learn whence our good qualities proceed, when, by seemingly losing them, we are made sensible that they are never preserved by our own efforts. And so, for the purpose of tutoring us in humility, it very often happens that, when the crisis of temptation is upon us, such extreme folly comes down upon our wisdom, that the mind, being dismayed, knows nothing how to meet the evils that are threatened, or how to make ready against temptation."
Gregory the Great, Morals in Job, II.78.
Gregory the Great, Morals in Job, II.78.
Ponder: "by his patience, laid low the cruel one"
"Thus blessed Job, when stricken with the loss of his substance and with the death of his children, forasmuch as he turned the force of his anguish into praise of his Creator, exclaiming The Lord gave and the Lord taketh away; as it hath pleased the Lord, so is it done; blessed be the Name of the Lord: by his humility, struck down the enemy in his pride, and by his patience, laid low the cruel one. Let us never imagine that our combatant received wounds and yet inflicted none. For whatever words of patience he gave forth to the praise of God, when he was stricken, he as it were hurled so many darts into the breast of his adversary, and inflicted much sorer wounds than he underwent, for by his affliction he lost the things of earth, but by bearing his affliction with humility, he multiplied his heavenly blessings."
Gregory the Great, Morals in Job, II.21
Gregory the Great, Morals in Job, II.21
Monday, June 20, 2016
The healing we need
Our hearts have been broken this
week, as we have read and watched coverage of the killing of 49 people at the
Pulse nightclub in Orlando. Saint Paul
urges us to “weep with those who weep,”[1]
and this has been a week for tears and prayers.
So many people slain in the prime of life, hatred that is difficult for
us to comprehend—the world seems a darker and more dangerous place.
Allison
and I had been in Orlando the week before last for a theology conference. We had dinner a mile and a half from the
nightclub the evening before the tragedy.
“It could have been us,” we thought.
If you are gay or Latino, I imagine you may be feeling much more
threatened. Another unpredictable act of
gun violence, another undetected terrorist, one of us turned against all of
us. “How long will it last?” we ask
ourselves. Is this just how it will be
for us now?
Monday, June 6, 2016
Speaking across the gap
He cried out to the Lord, "O
Lord my God, have you brought calamity even upon the widow with
whom I am staying, by killing her son?"
I Kings 17:20
For me, the biggest surprise of my
trip to Zambia in April was having dinner with the Archbishop of
Canterbury. It wasn’t at all
planned. I’d been given a banquet ticket
at the last minute, and when the waiter went looking for a seat for me, it was
the first one he spotted, right at the front, beside the spiritual head of the
world’s 85 million Anglicans.
I was delighted, of course. I am a great admirer of Archbishop
Welby’s. I pray for him every morning,
and I believe that God has given him to us as the leader we need at this
challenging time. Given a few days’
notice, I could have formulated any number of appropriate anecdotes for a
casual evening or profound questions for an interview. But I was not prepared, on a few seconds’
notice to make small talk to him for an hour or so.
I wasn’t really afraid I would use
the wrong fork or the wrong title. It
was dark enough to conceal the flatware and the menu was traditional
Zambian. I’m not sure that the
archbishop knew how to spear pan-fried caterpillars any better than I did.
Sunday, June 5, 2016
Stirring up the gift of preaching
From "The WORD," St. Timothy's, Herndon, June, 2016.
“Preach the word, be urgent in season and out of season,
convince, rebuke, and exhort, be unfailing in patience and in teaching.” II Tim 4:2
I have been reading through Saint
Paul’s Epistles to Timothy over the last week at Morning Prayer, and I’ve been
struck by how often they discuss preaching.
Together with the Epistle to Titus, scholars call them the “Pastoral
Epistles.” They are essentially letters
of advice from a senior church leader, St. Paul, to his beloved junior
colleague.
Paul had prepared Timothy, over
many years, for his ministry as a bishop.
He had shared the good news about Jesus with him, and showed him how to
teach and encourage different kinds of people.
He had watched Paul deal with controversies and broker agreements. Paul had watched over Timothy, tested him to
know his suitability, and he had sent him off with prayer, trusting steadfastly
in the Holy Spirit.
But now that Timothy had been
engaged in his ministry for a few years, some further instruction was
necessary. And a great deal of that
instruction focused on preaching. Some
of Paul’s advice is about the content of the Christian message and how it
relates to other dangerous ideas. Some
of the advice is about adapting the message to different kinds of audiences,
who bring different spiritual needs to the weekly gathering for worship. A fair amount of it is simply encouragement
and exhortation, as Paul urges Timothy to remember just how important preaching
really is, and to always be earnest in presenting his case, “in season and out
of season.”
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